Cruise Ships Help Hurricane Irma Victims in St. Thomas and St. Maarten

Several cruise ships are coming to the rescue to help victims of Hurricane Irma.

Royal Caribbean International is sending two cruise ships to the Caribbean to help with humanitarian aid and provide evacuations. One ship will head to St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands and another will go to St. Maarten in the Leeward Islands.

“Adventure of the Seas will make a humanitarian stop in St. Maarten on Sunday and Majesty of the Seas will make humanitarian calls in St. Thomas and St. Maarten to provide supplies and also assist in transporting evacuees in St. Maarten to safety,” the company said on its website on Saturday.

The cruise line said it has two other cruise ships, Empress of the Seas and Enchantment of the Seas, ready to help people in Key West, Tampa and other locations “once the impact of the storm is known.”

Norwegian Cruise Line said it is sending the Norwegian Sky to St. Thomas to help out.

“Acting as a responsible corporate citizen and supporting the destinations that our ships operate in is a core value of Norwegian Cruise Line. In the wake of this devastating storm, we will be deploying Norwegian Sky from her current position off the coast of Cancun to St. Thomas to assist in humanitarian efforts coordinated by the local government,” the company said in a statement on Saturday.

Royal Caribbean used one of its ships to evacuate employees from Miami on Friday. According to the Miami Herald, The Enchantment of the Seas evacuated 1,500 employees who work at the company’s PortMiami building.

Hurricane Irma was downgraded to a Category 3 storm as it passed over the northern coast of Cuba on Saturday. But the National Hurricane Center said it was expected to regain strength as it heads toward Florida.

The core of Irma will continue to move near or over the north coast of Cuba this afternoon, and will reach the Florida Keys Sunday morning. The hurricane is expected to move along or near the southwest coast of Florida Sunday afternoon.

The storm currently has maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour, but is expected to become a Category 4 hurricane by the time it makes landfall in Florida.